Thursday, November 20, 2014

Rick Warren's laughfest at the Vatican...

According to Rick in the video above, he is a a staunch defender of marriage being defined as between only a woman and man. Is Rick Warren a joke? We at Call Me Jorge... would have to answer in the affirmative. Here is what Pastor Rick told Larry King in an interview which happened on 6 April 2009. Underlines are ours.

PASTOR RICK WARREN: Yes, you
know, Larry, there was a story within a story that never got told. In
the first place, I am not an anti-gay or anti-gay marriage activist. I
never have been, never will be.

During the whole
Proposition 8 thing, I never once went to a meeting, never once issued a
statement, never -- never once even gave an endorsement in the two
years Prop 8 was going.

The week before the -- the vote, somebody in my church said, Pastor Rick, what -- what do you think about this?

And I sent a note to my own members that said, I actually believe
that marriage is -- really should be defined, that that definition
should be -- say between a man and a woman.

And then all of
a sudden out of it, they made me, you know, something that I really
wasn't. And I actually -- there were a number of things that were
put out. I wrote to all my gay friends -- the leaders that I knew -- and
actually apologized to them. That never got out.

There
were some things said that -- you know, everybody should have 10 percent
grace when they say public statements. And I was asked a question that
made it sound like I equated gay marriage with pedophilia or incest,
which I absolutely do not believe. And I actually announced that.

All of the criticism came from people that didn't know me.

KING: Well...

WARREN:Not a single criticism
came from any gay leader who knows me and knows that for years, we've
been working together on AIDS issues and all these other things.

KING:All right. Do you, therefore, criticize or not comment on the Iowa court decision to permit gay marriage?

WARREN: Yes. I'm -- I'm totally oblivious to -- to what -- that's not even my agenda. My agenda is two things.

One, today is the 15th anniversary of the genocide in Rwanda. It's a
national day of mourning, which I -- as you know, I've been heavily
involved in -- in Rwanda and helping rebuild that nation and I'm very
concerned about that.

And the second thing is, I'm
interested in what the recession is doing to the spiritual climate of
our nation. And as we start Easter week and Passover week, which is a
really big week for those of us who are Jews or Christians, Passover and
Easter, it's our biggest week of the year. And it actually was the --
the week that I started Saddleback Church 30 years ago this Easter
Sunday.

I wonder that you are so soon removed from him that called you into the grace of Christ, unto another gospel.
Which is not another, only there are some that trouble you, and would pervert the gospel of Christ. But though we, or an angel from heaven, preach a gospel to you besides that which we have preached to you, let him be anathema.
As we said before, so now I say again: If any one preach to you a
gospel, besides that which you have received, let him be anathema. For do I now persuade men, or God? Or do I seek to please men? If I yet pleased men, I should not be the servant of Christ.

Before the internet one only had access to what was reported in the mainstream media and in one's Diocesan newspaper. Now that one has access to the truth in its full unvarnished reality, I cannot understand how so many people who believe themselves to be "catholic" earn money making excuses for this horrible apostasy and do not sound from the rafters the necessity of breaking away if one wants to save one's soul.

Why doesn't Rick Warren renounce birth control? Why doesn't he renounce divorce? It is these practices that have destroyed the family. The normalizing of homosexuality is simply what happens as we descend into bestiality and destruction like ancient Greece and Rome.

W/Fairy Wuerl in charge in DC homosexual "Dignity" now speaks for Catholics even in the 'conservative' Washington Times: “Catholics do not want our government to create special rules and exemptions from the law,” said Marianne Duddy-Burke, executive director of Dignity USA, an advocacy group for gay Catholics. “This would violate our fundamental commitment to social justice and common good.” The survey results were announced Monday during a press conference on Capitol Hill. Among the results: 67 percent of Catholic voters disapprove of employers denying birth control coverage to employees based on the company’s religious beliefs. In addition, more than 50 percent of Catholic voters said they support physician-assisted suicide, and 70 percent said they support stem cell research."http://www.cathnewsusa.com/2014/11/us-catholics-oppose-religious-health-care-exemptions-birth-control-poll/